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    The Computer Audiophile

    Roon 1.7 With Valence Is Released

    Given that Roon 1.7 was a somewhat under the radar relase Wednesday evening, and those of us in the press were asked not to release any information until 9:00 GMT, there isn't much value to add to the official press release at the moment. The version 1.7 discussion began as soon as Roon Cores, clients and remotes beagn upgrading last night, and continues right now in the Audiophile Style forum here - https://audiophilestyle.com/forums/topic/57706-roon-17-is-available/

     

    I have high hopes that Roon Valence is similar to Pandora's Music Genome Project, a technology that I believe it the best in the business with respect to separating musical attributes and finding different ways to link people with their favorite music (discoverd and undiscovered). I look forward to digging into Roon version 1.7 and putting Valence through its paces. 

     

    Note: The lifetime subscription to Roon has increased in cost from $499 to $699 with the release of version 1.7. The yearly cost remains $119.

     

     

    Official press release:

     

     

    Introducing Valence — finding your next music obsession with Roon 1.7!

    Roon Labs is proud to announce the largest project we’ve ever undertaken. After two years of focused design and engineering, we’re unveiling an entirely new technology we call Valence.

    Valence is a system built on a massive new cloud database, which uses machine learning algorithms – designed with our passion for music – to model the many dimensions of relatedness more deeply than ever before. And because you use Roon to explore, collect, and listen to the music you love, Valence understands you like no other.

    The secret ingredient is the Roon community; Valence learns from the musical tastes of over 100,000 expert listeners who use Roon. 

    The result is the ultimate music expert, which presents the world of music through a lens personalized just for you.

    If you’ve used the hugely popular Roon Radio, you’ve seen an early example of Valence in action. In the same way that the meaning of “radio” was transformed in Roon 1.6, today you’ll see Valence transform your understanding of ideas like “new releases for you” and “suggested for you” in Roon 1.7.

    Beyond Valence, there’s more to this update: we’ve brought the kind of experience you expect from Roon to the world of live radio, and Roon OS has received a massive performance boost. As always, feedback from the community has led to a number of other improvements as well.

     

    Roon 1.7 includes three entirely new features that are powered by Valence:

    New Releases For You

    roon valence 01.jpg

    In most streaming apps, “New releases” are just a list of everything that’s been released this week, or sometimes only certain titles that are being marketed. Valence lets Roon show you new releases you care about, based on your library and listening history. The more you use Roon, the better the “New Releases” will get!

    Recommended For You

    roon valence 02.jpg

    Valence also powers a small selection of recommendations on the album screen, selecting relevant albums and allowing you to a browse a nearly-endless supply of similar music.

    Artist Play and Composer Play

    roon valence 03.jpg

    These new play options use Valence to pick a selection of an artist or composer's best music by determining their “heyday” periods, finding their most popular albums (based on Roon users’ listening history), and digging deep to find lesser-known gems. Whether it’s an artist you know and love, or someone new you’re ready to explore, now you can just click Play.

     

    Valence now improves several long-standing Roon features as well:

    Faster, more accurate Search

    roon valence 04.jpg

    We’ve completely re-engineered our search algorithm based on feedback from the Roon community. Valence now tracks hundreds of data points when interpreting search terms, delivering more accurate and relevant results.

    Better context for classical Compositions

    roon valence 05.jpg

    Classical composer and composition views have been improved, presenting data more clearly and comprehensively. Most importantly, Valence uses the community’s listening history to allow sorting by popularity, so you can benefit from the expertise of other listeners when choosing performances of a composition.

    Credits metadata is vastly improved

    roon valence 06.jpg

    Valence has considerably increased both the coverage and quality of credits in Roon. Over 44 million additional credits have been introduced to fill gaps that existed before, and the roles associated with those credits are more consistent and accurate. This release also includes support for importing credits from file tags.

     

    Other features of the 1.7 release:

    Live Radio directory

    roon valence 07.jpg

    We’re thrilled to launch our Live Radio directory, a collection of more than 1000 live radio stations, hand curated by the Roon community. Now you can browse stations by genre or quickly find your local stations. As with all streaming content, live radio can be added to your library for easy access later. Remember, the directory is an actively maintained database; if you have questions, suggestions, or if there’s a station you can’t find, let them know in the Radio Curation category on our community site.

    Streaming Optimizations

    roon valence 08.jpg

    For music playing from TIDAL and Qobuz, Roon now buffers data in a less disruptive way, and there are optimizations which reduce disk activity, CPU usage, and memory traffic. This means that streaming content starts faster and slower internet connections (or lower-powered cores) may also benefit when streaming high-resolution content.

    Android audio improvements

    When playing on an Android device, Roon now plays in the background with metadata and transport controls available in the Android “notification” area. Roon performs more gracefully when the state of  an Android device’s audio output changes, including when a phone call is received, when a headphone cable is removed, when a video is started on Facebook, etc. Signal Path will also report exactly how an Android device renders audio. Like most Android apps, Roon depends on the device to set sample rates.

    Performance improvements on Roon OS

    Starting with Roon 1.7, when running on Roon OS, Roon will use the Microsoft .NET Core Runtime, which offers higher performance and improved memory efficiency.

    Library management aspects of Roon typically run 30-40% faster, use less power, and generate less heat. This also enables larger music libraries on the same hardware.

    Roon OS has always been the best way to run Roon for most users, but as of this change, we are confident that it is the best option for everyone, regardless of library size. Roon on Roon OS is now more efficient and performs better than Roon on any other platform or product.

     

    We’ve also listened to user feedback beyond the big-ticket features, and introduced a variety of little crowd pleasers:

    Zone Icons

    roon valence 09.jpg

    Roon has always included custom icons for Roon Ready and Roon Tested devices, but today’s release allows for more customization for the Roon zones around your home, with more than 40 zone icons included.

    More File Tag processing

    Roon can now automatically create “Roon Tags” from special file tags at the album or track level. This is a hugely flexible mechanism for the importing of nearly any external organizational system. This release includes support for importing lyrics and credits from file tags as well.

    Visual improvements

    Roon's font and color rendering has also undergone a major overhaul. Across the app, on all platforms, text shapes will appear cleaner and smoother, and the intent of the font is better preserved, improving readability. Additionally, the coloring of album covers should feel truer to the physical media on a wider range of LCD monitors.

    Text layout improvements

    In addition to looking better, Roon now has complete support for right-to-left scripts such as Arabic and Hebrew. Faster performance in the user interface and less resource intensive rendering makes a significant impact, especially on tablets and phones.




    User Feedback

    Recommended Comments



    Agree about RAAT. 

     

    Otherwise (with apologies to Churchill), roon is the worst music playback software except for all the rest.

     

    Haha, just kidding. But that's sort of where I'm at.

     

    To me, 1.7 and Valencia or whatever branding seemed like a rush job to reassure all the folks on their forum wondering if/when there will ever be a new release or if roon is even still in business.

     

    Their notion of crowdsourcing personalized recommendations based on AI applied to their users' likes and dislikes sounds great on paper, but it only goes so far with 100,000 or so weirdos like me liking and disliking v. say, Spotify's 100 million.  

     

    Anyway, even with all their annoyances and attitude, roon is pretty slick and robust software for what it is. Here's hoping 1.8 or 2.0 Velociraptor or whatever knocks it out of the park.

     

    If not, I'll be looking around again. And inevitably coming back to roon. Again.

     

     

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    On 11/21/2019 at 3:16 AM, senior.god said:

    In my humble opinion: In relation to the prices for Amazon HD or the new Qobuz pricing the yearly Roon price is much too high.....😭

     

     

    $119??  That's a bargain for what it does.

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    On 11/23/2019 at 1:21 PM, DancingSea said:

     

    I write this not as a criticism of Roon, but rather out of software economics curiosity.  All the other players in this space, A+, Amarra, HQP, etc have not taken the subscription route.  These charge for a license for a given rendition, have free minor updates along the way, and then offer major, optional updates for an additional fee.  With Audirvana I paid $74 for 2.6 and paid another $40 to upgrade to 3.5 about 2 years later.

     

    The question is why are Roon’s financial needs so much greater than the other software players?  Why is a $500, and now $700 for a lifetime license, not sustainable for Roon? Is it because Roon is a larger company compared to the one man bands of A+ and HQP, thus have more mouths to feed?  Following the A+ pattern I described above of a 2 year upgrade cycle, it would take approximately 30 years to equal a total of $674 paid to Damien.

     

    I use Roon everyday.  Roon is a premium product and when combined with HQP, makes an outstanding system.  I understand Roon wants to maximize their profit and will charge what the market will bear.  I understand that a continual stream of annual fees will make Roon more money.  But I don’t understand how a $700 lifetime license fee is specifically unsustainable, or even $500.

     

    Roon does seem to have a corporate structure of VP’s, COO’s, CFO’s etc.  While HQP and Audirvana have a corporate structure of perhaps a few house pets.  And maybe that’s the ultimate difference of why Roon needs more money, to pay the big salaries?

     

    It’s an interesting strategic quandary.  The low price to get more folks in the tent vs a significantly higher price to get more from fewer.  I like Valence and appreciate Roon’s move to incorporate Pandora like recommendations, and the new radio features are interesting, but how much more can really be done to improve Roon in a major way?  And it seems they will one day have to move to monthly billing.  But isn’t $10/ month about the ceiling for album sorting software?  How could they charge more?  Seems they need a lot more customers and not yet higher prices.

     

     

    You use Roon extensively and think it's just album sorting software?  Seriously?

    I have no idea how someone who is an audiophile thinks $119 a year for what you get with Roon is too much money.  It's a bargain.

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    For me, it's not about what you get, it's about what you do not.

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    I have demoed Roon twice and have decided that I am not in its marketing demographic.  This is because of my poor, metered internet connection and the fact that I don't stream because of this.  Therefore, in my case Roon has offered nothing different than what I can get many other places for far less money.

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    2 hours ago, DarwinOSX said:

     

     

    You use Roon extensively and think it's just album sorting software?  Seriously?

    I have no idea how someone who is an audiophile thinks $119 a year for what you get with Roon is too much money.  It's a bargain.

    With all due respect, your last several posts have been fairly abrasive. Can you tone it down a bit?

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    I use all the various functions of Roon extensively: DSP, convolution, volume levelling, EQ, display to monitor, etc. It also has the best UI integration of streaming services there is. It does all that in one interface  and playback to multiroom, and gives me almost no problems - unlike many other SW packages that I have to mess with quite a bit to get them to do what I want and they are less convenient and don't have as useful a UI. 

     

    I have zero issues with the price. You get what you pay for. 

     

    If you don't need most of it's functions, then maybe it isn't for you. 

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    Even at 500$ for lifetime subscription is cheap/bargain as I did some years ago it has already paid for itself for the rest of my life is now ROON free with all the great features 

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    On 5/11/2020 at 6:21 AM, DarwinOSX said:

     

     

    You use Roon extensively and think it's just album sorting software?  Seriously?

    I have no idea how someone who is an audiophile thinks $119 a year for what you get with Roon is too much money.  It's a bargain.

     

    I do think Roon is drastically overpriced.  I also own a lifetime Roon membership, which I also think is overpriced.  And I exclusively listen to music via Roon/ HQP4, and I think HQP4 is overpriced as well.  It's possible to think something is overpriced and yet still own, use and respect it.  Price is one thing, performance is another.  How one correlates the two is entirely individual, there is no right or wrong.

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    On 5/11/2020 at 4:16 PM, bobbmd said:

    Even at 500$ for lifetime subscription is cheap/bargain as I did some years ago it has already paid for itself for the rest of my life is now ROON free with all the great features 

     

    I agree with this 100%. It is even a bigger bargain when you realize that Roon has mentioned that at some point the lifetime license will be going away and everyone who did not buy one will be paying a yearly subscription fee. At the new price it takes 5.8 years for yearly subscription fees to cost as much as a lifetime license.

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    6 hours ago, DancingSea said:

     

    I do think Roon is drastically overpriced.  I also own a lifetime Roon membership, which I also think is overpriced.  And I exclusively listen to music via Roon/ HQP4, and I think HQP4 is overpriced as well.  It's possible to think something is overpriced and yet still own, use and respect it.  Price is one thing, performance is another.  How one correlates the two is entirely individual, there is no right or wrong.

    You are obviously free to think things are overpriced, but your opinion isn't really based on anything other than your personal idea of money and value. 

    Roon has stated that the lifetime subscription will stop being offered in the not distant future as it is not a viable economic propostion. Miska will tell you that he's not getting rich off of HQP, and has other work that he does to support himself.  

    If your idea of fair pricing was applied, apparently both products would cease to exist. 

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    I pay Adobe $56.98 every month so I can do a few things here and there in Illustrator and Premiere. Talk about overpriced. If I used them daily to make money the price would be fine. 

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    5 hours ago, The Computer Audiophile said:

    I pay Adobe $56.98 every month so I can do a few things here and there in Illustrator and Premiere. Talk about overpriced. If I used them daily to make money the price would be fine. 

     

    Same here.  :)

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    7 hours ago, The Computer Audiophile said:

    I pay Adobe $56.98 every month so I can do a few things here and there in Illustrator and Premiere. Talk about overpriced. If I used them daily to make money the price would be fine. 

     

    But the enjoyment and value I get out fo Roon on a daily basis is worth so much more to me than $119 a year, or in my case a lifetime license cost.

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    18 minutes ago, AudioDoctor said:

     

    But the enjoyment and value I get out fo Roon on a daily basis is worth so much more to me than $119 a year, or in my case a lifetime license cost.

    Agree. 

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    5 hours ago, dsnyder said:

     

    Same here.  :)

    Funny thing happened between then and now :~)

     

    I just canceled Adobe Creative Cloud and purchased some apps from Affinity for $24.99 each, one time fee. They will work for me.

     

    Roon on the other hand, I just renewed my yearly subscription yesterday. 

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    On 5/13/2020 at 12:29 AM, firedog said:

    You are obviously free to think things are overpriced, but your opinion isn't really based on anything other than your personal idea of money and value. 

    Roon has stated that the lifetime subscription will stop being offered in the not distant future as it is not a viable economic propostion. Miska will tell you that he's not getting rich off of HQP, and has other work that he does to support himself.  

    If your idea of fair pricing was applied, apparently both products would cease to exist. 

     

    The whole thing is a matter of personal opinion when it comes to matters of value.  There is no right, or wrong answer.  Only your own 😉 

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    3 minutes ago, DancingSea said:

     

    The whole thing is a matter of personal opinion when it comes to matters of value.  There is no right, or wrong answer.  Only your own 😉 

    Agree. This place would be pretty boring if it was any other way :~)

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